100 Iowa 181 | Iowa | 1896
L. As stated by counsel for plaintiff, the only question in the -case is, not whether the plaintiff could have been removed under the writ of possession in the suit against her husband, nor whether
II. Prior to August 8, 1878, these parties had negotiated and agreed upon an exchange of Mrs. Laraway’s Missouri land, for the Wilson interest in the land in controversy, and on that day met at the office of Cardell & Shortly, in Perry, Iowa, to complete the deal. Plaintiff contends that on that day Mrs. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Clark, executed to her a quit-claim deed for the land in controversy, in consideration of her deed to Mrs. Wilson for the Missouri land. There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether a deed was executed to the plaintiff, and we think the preponderance is in favor of the conclusion that there was not. There was no necessity for such a deed. The only interest that the Wilson heirs had was under the Rowley contract, and this interest would be fully transferred by an assignment of the contract. The Wilson heirs, either then or theretofore, assigned the Rowley contract to Isaac Laraway, and therefore were
III. We next inquire as to the effect that should be given to the quit-claim deed from Laraway.to the plaintiff. The Rowley contract had long before become forfeited by its own terms, and neither plaintiff nor her husband had any rights under it. This quit-claim deed was made December 30, 1880, and on January 1,1881, the contract between Litchfield and Laraway became forfeited by failure to pay the one hundred and thirty dollars due that day. All that Mr. Laraway had conveyed was his right under that contract, and, if that deed may be treated as a transfer of that interest, Mrs. Laraway has forfeited all rights under it by failing to make the payments required. Knowing, as we think she did, that Laraway had no interest in the land at that time except under his contract, she took the deed subject to it, and therefore it cannot be said that her possession under that deed was adverse to intervener. She .testifies that the purpose of that deed was to divest her husband of the one-third interest that he had, as her husband, in her property. If such were the purpose, then clearly the deed does not furnish a color of title upon which to base ownership by adverse possession. We are satisfied that the execution of this deed and the. bill of sale were not good faith transactions, and that the deed was made and received with the hope of thereby, in some way, fabricating a claim of title. It seems to us clear beyond dispute, that neither Mrs. Laraway nor her husband ever had a shadow of tille to this land adverse to th.e title of Mr. Litchfield, that the only title they ever had was under the contracts with Mr. Litchfield, that the possession has been by Isaac Laraway, under • said contracts, and that the plaintiff has had no other possession or claim of right except as the wife of Isaac Laraway. The decree of the district court is affirmed.